Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 11, 1938, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
HENDERSON’S POPULATION 13,873 TWENTY-FIFTH YEAR ROOSEVELT "Mo Hard Feelings!” The Election Is Over : %m, il» v IHIBIImBB m Wr Y :mk tUfIHHBHr \ \ iilii < jgfe jdp» lav I. • i • : ik fflMßMrrfTß fi%,. / #f «.:.u£>iifr. L ■ - ■■- cjgg Hi *; :: : W & iHraHSll $&&?< ■■■■■ ' - s# is® i y iiini / - -■wmA JHHHnHPv-vi * I nilflfa jj 'm, >■ iiMBMiMaB WWIiIIiIMBMBII JllHP 1111 JP, , IMr jy iPP Mpy »*•;.* «||Pg«j JPllil& ; - > s§* > y ■■ |^F EHmSM Relaxing after their dose fight for the governorship of New York State, Democratic victor Herbert H Lehman, and vanquished Republican Thomas E. Dewey attended a theater in New York City—the same one. They are pictured shaking hands in the lobby. Dewey is at left; Lehman at right, with Mrs LdS be*: de her rov-and. AAA Considering Loans On Surplus Burley Crop Meet the Senator Ik. ft S y Jgg Another feminine face in the Sen- Wll that of Gladys Pyle (above) former South Dakota sec e ary of state, who ran up a ma thaS of .l 9,000 in inning fight for c s bort term. She is from the city of Sioux Falla. Amendment on Sheriffs Not As Yet Clear Daily Dispatch Bureau, In The Sir Walter Hotel. R ale i Kh> Nov. 11.—une hundred per «h' S -f^ 0 th* n k they have been elected “ 1,1 lffs °f North Carolina’s hundred , les tor four years are practically on to find themselves involved in ' f v ®* y controversy about the length of their terms. Because it is going to take a court con«H°/\- t 0 tell whether or not the nstltut ional amendment adopted (Continued on Page Three.) imtitersfln 710 ® OF IHE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Survey Shows Crop Won't Exceed 365 Millions and Be Worth 25 Cents; Virginia Sales Shown Washington, Nov. 11.—(AP) — The AAA will*decide the latter part of next month whether to cooperate with a cooperative marketing organization in Kentucky in' a - plan whereby burley tobacco in exdess of the 1938 farm market quotas might be stored and loans made available on the stored excess of producers who did not plant more than their 1938 acreage allot ments. Suggested by a delegation of Ken tucky tobacco men, the plan is being studied by J. B. Hutson, assistant AAA administrator. Hutson estimated there would be between 30 and 40 mil lion pounds of burley in excess of the marketing quota. Under existing re (Continued on Page Two.) Scott Says He Has Put New Life In Department Agriculture Commissioner Reports to General Assembly He Has Made Good 1936 Pledge To Revitalize Work; Summarizes Bureau Activi ties Daily Dlspatcli Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Nov. 11.—Commissioner of Agriculture W. Kerr Scott reports that he has made good his pre-elec tion promise of 1936 to “revitalize” the Department of Agriculture. * This boast is made as the first sen tence of the department’s biennial re port, copy for which has gone to the printers and which will be issued in pamphlet form in due course of time. “North Carolina’s Department of Agriculture has been revitalized dur ing the biennial”, the reports begins. ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED SEES NO Wade Turns Down Santa Clara Game Charlotte, Nov. 11.—(AP)—The Charlotte News, in a special story from Syracuse, N. Y., said today Coach Wallace Wade refused an invitation today for Duke Univer sity to meet Santa Clara in a New Year’s Day football game in Los Angeles. “I turned down this offer from the Santa Clara officials because the game was scheduled for Sun day,” the News quoted Wade as saying. Banker Gets Three Years Atlanta Pen Raleigh, Nov. 11. —(AP) —Judge L M. Meekins, in Federal district court today, sentenced Enoch W. Wilson, former State legislator from Sampson county, to serve three years in the (Continued on Page Four.) “Work of divisions has been con solidated to eliminate overlapping ac tivities and to effect economy. Equip ment has been added to increase ef ficiency. Changes in personnel and the addition of needed specialists have made it possible to give greater in spectional, regulatory and service work,” it continues. The report cites facts and figures to support its main theme. “A report port of the department is a report of its divisions,” it reads and thereto it (Continued on Page Twa) HENDERSON, N. C., Sally StsyaM IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, N OVEMBER 11, 1938 World Marks Armistice Event With Air Os Disillusionment Legion Head And Gardner Make Pleas Tar Heels Urge New Patriotism and De fense o f America; New Generation, With Only Dim Memories or None at All, Has (By The Associated Press). Twenty "years afte| the war to end war, an anxious world paused today to reflect on peace and disillusionment. A new generation, with only dim memories or none at ail of the World War and the great joy of November 11, 1918, ah ready has grown to fighting age It comes to maturity through years of struggle against the devastation of past wars, amid new wars and pre parations for more war, amid weak ened democracy and growing power of dictatorships. “The situation in the world today is as menacing as at any time in his tory,” declared General John Persh ing, who led the American forces in ■France. It was a rare statement on personal affairs from Pershing, who accepted an invitation to attend me morial ceremonies at the tomb of the ■Unknown Soldier with President Roosevelt. i The times, General Pershing said* demand “immediate and vigorous (Continued on Page Four) POSTMASTER JOBS' IN STATE OFFERED Washington, Nov. 11. —(AP) — The Civil Service Commission has an nounced it would receive applications until the close of business November 25 for postmasterships in North Car olina at Castalia and Englehard. Paris Under Heavy Guard And Jittery Threat of War Vete rans To Force “Pub lic Safety”, Cabinet Provides Menace i Paris, Nov. U- —(AP) —Thousands of stee’l-helmeted ■ mobile guards pa trolled Paris today with strict orders to stop any war veterans demonstra tion for a “public-safety” cabinet. The presence of the mobile guards, carrying carbines over their shoulders, and extra squads of police, gave the capital an air akin -to that which saw the World War end in the Armistice twenty years ago. , Pomp and material music, high lighted in a massive military parade, past the tomb »f the Unknown Sol dier, found Frenchmen of all stations (Continued on Page Four). THREAT TO HIS PLAHS Cuban Strong Man in U. S. I I * j || J® pp^:. Jj| Jhlp - /: W ' mS V * ilk v j—v ; '■ ISiK3BIWjS!K'• - Jl '■ HB99HH Colonel Fulgencio Batista, Cuban strong man, is pictured with his wife, as they were welcomed to Miami, Fla., on arrival in the United States. Batista immediately left for Washington for an official visit with Presi- * dent Roosevelt. Garment Union To Fight Shy Os CIO Body Washington, Nov. 11.—(AP) — The International Ladies Garment Workers Union, one of the found ers of the CIO, decided today not to affiliate with the permanent CIO organization which will be formetT in Pittsburgh next week. The union’s executive board adopt ed a resolutioni saying that since the union is opposed to “dual unionism we, therefore, decide not to take part in the move to form a permanent competitive na tional organization.” The resolution also said: “Being vitally interested in the reconcilia tion of the two parts of the labor (Continued on Page Three.) Gen. I. Inonu Named Head Turk Regime Ankara, Turkey,, Nov. 11. —(AP) — General I. Inonu, was elected by the national assembly today to succeed his late friend and long-time com rade, Kamal Ataturk, as president of Turkey. Ataturk, who died yesterday, once said of Inonu, a reformer and 3trong man in his own right, that “he Is my conscience—he is always on the alert and finds out what is wrong and cri ticizes me.” ' The new leader was premier for 13 (Continued on Page Three.). PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY Homage,,Paid The < Unkllown , —4 ; i iji/9 ajJTf •* By Roosevelt Washington, Nov. 11.—(AP)—Presi dent Roosevelt gave the nation’s hom age today to the Unknown Soldier, who rests on a rolling hillside in Ar lington cemetery. He motored from the White House through a bright au tumnal sun to the tomb of the sol dier, symbolic of America’s war dead, and, with high dignitaries and just plain people looking on, presented a wreath of white chrysanthemums at the marble sarcophagus. Mr. Roosevelt stood at solemn at tention while his naval aide, Captain Daniel Callaghan, stepped forward with the wreath. Then muffled drums rolled three times and an army bug ler sounded the notes of “taps”. The slow music rolled out over Arlington’s graves and across the Potomac to the majestic Lincoln Memorial, which picked up the tones and echoed them back. Directly after the President’s de parture, honor guards of the Marine Corps, Navy and Army silently salut ed their unknown conlpanion. The American Legio/r.< with representa tives from the 48 states and the Dis trict of Columbia, moved- into posi tion before the tomb, where National Commander Stephen Chadwick, of Seattle, Wash., laid a wreath below that of the President’s. Reverent silence governed the cere mony. Twenty years ago at 11 o’clock in the morning there was another sort of quiet, an unbelievable silence which in sudden drama succeeded the roar of battle. HtiTlllß FOR NORTH CAROLINA Generally fair tonight and Sat urday, with mild temperatures. "©“PAGES 1 O TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY Liberal Era To Continue, FDR Thinks Predicts He Will Not Encounter Coalition Opposition to His Pro gram in Next Con gress; Young Repub licans Have Been Swept Into Office Washington, Nov. 11 .(AP) —President Roosevelt said to-* day he did not believe the re sults of last Tuesday’s elections constituted any threat to the continuation of “liberal govern ment.” At his press conference, Mr. Roosevelt declared he thought the election reiiirns were all right. A questioner, referring to the Pres ident’s speech on Friday before the elections, asked Mr. Roosevelt wheth er he believed the outcome of the voting, which resulted in heavy Democratic losses and Republican gams, constituted a threat to the continuation of “liberal government.’ The President replied that he certain ly did not think so. At the same time, he predicted that he would not encounter what one of his questioners called “coalition oppo sition,” presumably the combining of Republican and anti-N.ew Deal Demo crats, against administration propo sals to Congress. He expressed the belief his con gressional program would be accord (Continued on Page Four.) FAMED POLTHCiAN ’• PASSES IN CHICAGO Chicago, Nov. 11 —(AP) John “Bathhouse” Coughlin, colorful poli tician and alderman of the first ward for nearly half a century, died today of pneumonia. He was 78 years old. He won the sobriquet of “Bitn house” John, or more familiarly “the bath,” because he began his career as a rubber in a Turkish bathhouse. Nazis Plan Ghetto For German Jews New Restrictive De crees Would . Mark Off Section Where They Would Live Alone London, Nov. 11.—(AP)—Brit ish public opinion has been so out raged by German violence against, Jews, informed quarters said to day, that Prime Minister Cham berlain’s pnferam of appeaaerpent with Germany may be consider ably hampered. The government, meanwhile, took steps to protect British Jews from violence in Ger many after Hie wave of anti- Semetic destruction that swept the country yesterday. Until yesterday there were per sistent rumors that the prime min ister soon would seek an oppor tunity to discuss the colonial question with Beichfuehrer Hit ler as part of a general European settlement. Now, it is believed, any (Continued on Page Fodr)
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 11, 1938, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75